Including The Excluded

This section of the Hidden Lives Revealed website highlights the Including The Excluded project, which shows how disabled children were cared for by The Children's Society.

Boys playing cricket at St Martin's Orthopaedic Hospital and SchoolAbout this image

The Children's Society Records and Archives Centre was recently
commissioned by the National Cataloguing Grants Programme for Archives
to open up access to The Children's Society's records relating to the
care of disabled children. The Children's Society is happy to announce
that the project, entitled 'Including the Excluded', has now been
completed.

During the course of the project several catalogues have been
produced, including a list of records relating to The Children's
Society's work with disabled children and a record of the homes set up
specifically by the charity to care for them. Examples of these homes
include St Nicholas' and St Martin's Home in Surrey, Bradstock Lockett
Home in Merseyside, and Halliwick School in London, although there are
of course many others.

Interestingly the catalogues list and index the individual case files
of the disabled children that were in The Children's Society's care in
the Victorian and Edwardian eras. These case files offer a fascinating
insight into the lives of disabled children during this time and contain
many stories that have not previously been heard.

As well as The Children's Society's work with disabled children, the
records of The Children's Union have been catalogued. The Children's
Union was a pioneering fundraising body that raised money, almost
entirely, through donations from children. The money raised went on to
support the children cared for by The Children's Society. The records
show that there was a strong link between The Children's Union and the
support of disabled children for over fifty years.

Boys and staff in the garden at St. Martin's Home for Boys, SurbitonAbout this image

The Children's Society Records, Archives & Protection Manager
Ian Wakeling said: "This project has given us a unique insight into the
circumstances of disabled children in the Victorian and Edwardian eras.
It showed how medical and social care given to them by The Children's
Society allowed them to lead as normal a life as possible. The charity's
approach to disability was ahead of its time and the records document this."

For The Children's Society's Records and Archives Centre, it is a
constant challenge to maintain the records in as good a condition as
possible. Part of the project was the cleaning and repackaging of 600
case files. Many of the case files were in poor condition, making them
difficult to handle and leaving them in danger of sustaining further
damage over time. The repackaging of these case files means that they
are now easier to use and has helped to ensure that they will be
preserved for years to come.

'Including the Excluded' has opened up a range of records that were
previously inaccessible, making them available for future research. The
wealth of information that the records contain can help to explain what
life was like for disabled children in The Children's Society's care
over 100 years ago. It is a history that, until now, has remained
unexplored.